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Lake District Commissioner Workshop, Part 1

Join us for Part 1 of the 2009 Wisconsin Lakes Convention to learn about the general operations and duties of a Lake District Commissioner. Presented by Judy Jooss, Past President of the Wisconsin Association of Lakes, and Jeff Thornton, PhD PH CLM of the Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission.

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Lake District Commissioner Workshop, Part 1

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  1. Lake District Commissioner Workshop, Part 1 2009 Wisconsin Lakes Convention General Operations & Commissioner Duties Judy Jooss, Past President: Wisconsin Association of Lakes, County Representative: District of Powers Lake Jeff Thornton PhD PH CLM, Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission

  2. We’d like to meet you… Every lake district is unique and will have its own unique situations — • nothing is too trivial • we are always learning from each other —“networking”

  3. Lake Districts are: • Specialized Units of Government • Powers and Operations are set by law • Governed under Chapter 33 of State Statutes • Governed under Municipal Law

  4. Lake Associations are: • Organizations, similar to homeowners groups • Typically voluntary • May be incorporated • May be tax exempt • “Qualified” lake associations are grant eligible

  5. Qualified Lake Associations • Incorporated under Ch 181, Wis Stats • In existence for at least 1 year • Formed for the purpose of lake improvement • Membership open to anyone within 1 mile of the lake • At least 25 members • Annual dues between $5 - $50

  6. What’s Best? • Whatever type meets your needs • Districts & associations can work together • What starts as an association may transition into a district in the future

  7. Forming a Lake District • Petition signed by property owners whose names appear on tax role. • Petition must contain statement of benefit, necessity, public welfare, description of boundaries, proposed name for district. • Resolution from any city or village with land to be included within the district. • Government approval.

  8. Modifying a District • A district boundary may be changed by: • Attaching/Detaching lands • By motion of the Board of Commissioners • By petition of a land owner • Merging with an adjoining district • By resolution of both boards • Dissolving the district • Requires a majority vote at an annual meeting

  9. Identity • What’s your name and where do you live? • Be consistent with what you call your lake district • Are you Bass Lake District, Bass Lake PRD, District of Bass Lake, Bass Lake District of Polk County, or … • Establish a PO Box for district mail

  10. A lake district is governed by: • The Board of Commissioners • The Annual Meeting

  11. Board of Commissioners - 1 • Standard board: • 3 elected commissioners • One must be a district resident • 2 appointed commissioners • Enlarged board: • 5 elected commissioners • Can not be reversed • 2 appointed commissioners

  12. Board of Commissioners - 2 • Elected commissioners: • 3 year staggered terms • secret ballot is required even if there is no contest • Vacancies filled by appointment • Are considered local government officials • May take oath of office

  13. Board of Commissioners - 3 2 appointed commissioners: • Appointee of the city, village or town with the largest equalized valuation • Appointee nominated by county Land & Water Conservation Committee & appointed by county board

  14. Board of Commissioners - 4 Appointed Commissioners: do not need to be property owners or electors of the district have a full voice at the quarterly meetings of the board of commissioners of the district can vote at the annual meeting of the district only if they meet the voting requirements

  15. Officers of the District Chairperson, secretary, & treasurer • One year term • Elected by the board of commissioners

  16. Duties of Commissioners • Chair presides at all meetings of district • Treasurer shall receive and take charge of all monies • Secretary keeps minutes & other district records, prepares & sends notices of meetings • The board shall • meet quarterly, not including the annual meeting • manage the day to day activities of the district • schedule the annual meeting • propose an annual budget

  17. Ethical Standards for Commissioners As local government officials… you are prohibited from: • Taking action on something you have a financial interest in • Accepting a gift that could influence vote/action • Using position to obtain financial gain • Using position to benefit yourself

  18. Legal Responsibilities of Commissioners As local government officials… You are required to follow: • Open Meetings Law • Public Records Law • Budget & accounting laws in Ch 33, Wis. Stat. Different from lake associations, clubs, other organizations

  19. Is this a walking quorum?

  20. What is required by the Open Meetings Law? • Advance public notice of a meeting — at least 24 hours • Longer notice requirements for annual & special meetings [Ch 33.30, Stats.] • Sub-groups of the board must also post meetings • All business must be conducted in open session • Special requirements for closed sessions [Ch 19.85(1), Stats.]

  21. Requirements for “open session” • The meeting must be held in an area that is large enough for expected attendance and reasonably accessible to the public • Meetings should not be held in private homes, private rooms in restaurants • Meetings should be held in locations near the public that is being served

  22. The Public Must Be Notified • For Commissioner meetings: • Notice may be posted at three different locations in the area frequented by members of the district, or • Notice may be given in a newspaper • Email & internet notices may not be used instead of postings or publication

  23. A Public Notice Includes: • Time • Date • Place • Subject matter • The agenda needs to contain enough detail for someone to understand the issue and decide whether or not they need to attend the meeting. • It’s not enough to say “boating.” Specific nature of agenda item should be spelled out: “discussion and possible action on the hiring of water safety patrols”. • Good idea to include time for public comment.

  24. Record Keeping - 1 Open Records Requirements • Secretary to maintain records • Keep minutes – at least motions and votes • Keep supporting documents for actions taken • Recommended practice: designate/establish repository for district records

  25. Record Keeping - 2 Open Records Requirements • Requests for records • Need to provide • May charge for this service • Options for making records easily available • Website • Post at library, public launch, town hall, post office…

  26. Annual & Special Meetings

  27. Annual & Special Meetings • Property owners & electors have voice • Notices – Open Meetings Law • Extra requirements • Records – Public Records Law • Same as for commissioner meetings • Time – annual meeting must occur between May 22 & September 8, unless another date is selected at the previous annual meeting

  28. Special Meetings - 1 • May be held at any time of the year • May be scheduled by the board • May be scheduled upon petition of 10% of the property owners & electors • Subject to same notice requirements as annual meeting

  29. Special Meetings - 2 • Can NOT approve an annual budget • May amend the budget • Can NOT dissolve the district • Can NOT reconsider a matter resolved during another special meeting.

  30. Notice of Annual Meeting • 14 days before meeting: • Mail to property owners (required) • Mail to electors (Option: Commissioners may vote to publish [paid] legal notice in two successive issues of official paper) • Mail notice to DNR • Provide notice to any media that requests it

  31. June 30 Mail date Annual Meeting Example Timeline Prepare agenda Print copies Get mailing list ready Assemble mailing July 14 Annual Meeting June 26 Send to paper July 3 publish July 10 publish

  32. Annual Meeting Notice Includes • Time, date, place • Agenda • List of items to be considered, be specific • Public input time suggested • Proposed budget • Detail (Ch 33.29(1)(g), Stats.) • Proposed levy • Candidates – not required

  33. Who can vote? • A person whose name appears on the tax roll. • A person who owns title to real property – a “spouse” may vote. • One official representative of a trust or corporation in the district. • A registered voter resident in the district. • Owners of multiple properties can only vote once.

  34. The Voting Process • Be prepared • Have a copy of the tax roll • Voter self-certification document • Color coded ballots or voter ID cards • Organize the process • Have a formal check-in process • Get enough help • Serve refreshments, have exhibits • “Complaint department” • No absentee ballots or proxies

  35. Self- certification of eligibility Who can vote?

  36. Financing Lake District Operations • General property tax (2.5 mill cap) • For general operating expenses • Special charges ($2.50/$1000 cap) • For activities with temporary benefits to individual properties • Special assessments • For very large projects – usually involves financing

  37. WIS. DEPT. OF REVENUE SPECIAL DISTRICT CERTIFICATION OF 2005 VALUES 10/04/05 BUREAU OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS TX27110A 64 8030 HONEY LAKE PRO & REHAB DIST FULL VALUE % TOTAL 51 014 T ROCHESTER$14,942,789 47.828052 64 024 T SPRING PRAIRIE $16,299,941 52.171948 SPECIAL DISTRICT TOTAL $31,242,730 100.000000 Example: Levy: $10,000 $10,000 x 47.8% = $4,780 T Rochester $10,000 x 52.2% = $5,220 T Spr. Prairie Current mill rate: $10,000 / $31,242,730 = 0.00032 mills ($0.32/$1000) $31,242,730 x .0025 mills = $78,107.00($2.50/$1000 of equalized valuation) Maximum levy:

  38. The Budget • General operating expenses • Capital fund • Grants and Loans • Projects $10,000 or greater • Annual meeting “may consider and vote on amendments” before approving budget

  39. Audit • Prepared annually • Cash or accrual methods are OK • Presented at annual meeting • May be done by an internal committee or an accounting firm

  40. Odds & Ends

  41. Bylaws – yes / no / maybe… • Drawbacks • The simpler, the better • Need to comply with Chapter 33 & other laws • cannot conflict / Ch 33 supersedes • Provide for making changes • Alternatives • Operating policies

  42. Bids Required • If enter into a contract for the performance of work over: • The purchase of any materials exceeding: • Lowest responsible bidder • Typically — Written request for proposals sent to local paper and distributed to contractors/vendors • Don’t be afraid to ask contractors/ consultants for references, …and follow up on them. $2,500

  43. Professional Services vs. Work • Professional services – • Define – task requiring specialized knowledge • Examples: lake management plan, APM plan, insurance evaluation, legal advice • Bids not required • Work • Define – repetitive tasks • Examples: dredging, purchase of insurance, aquatic plant treatments, • Bids are required

  44. Robert’s Rules • Purpose is to help conduct an orderly meeting • Become familiar with basics • But don’t become bogged down in procedure • Order of motions - on CD • www.robertsrules.com

  45. Communications • How do you communicate with your members? • Newsletter • Website • Other… grapevine blog twitter

  46. Networking • WAL • UW-Extension • DNR • Each other • Lake Leaders • Lakes Convention • Lake List www.uwsp.edu/cnr/uwexlakes

  47. Contact us… • Send questions or suggestions • Jeff Thornton jthornton@sewrpc.org, IEMS@aol.com • Judy Jooss jjooss@charter.net

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